Assessing impacts of wild boar on ecosystems is a research priority worldwide, with applied implications for environmental management. We evaluated whether rooting intensity by wild boar affected a rodent community in Central Italy. Rooting intensity was measured within trap transects and all around them, following standard procedures. We live-trapped rodents in coppiced forests with a gradient of rooting intensity (including a fenced, boar-proof, area) and evaluated relationships between abundance and rooting for two arboreal and five ground-dwelling species. Among those, the most abundant ones were the bank vole Myodes glareolus and the yellow-necked wood mouse Apodemus flavicollis. Rooting within and outside transects correlated to each other, as well as with the local passage rate of the wild boar, assessed through camera-trapping. We found a negative relationship between rooting intensity and abundance of bank voles, that is, the main food resources of some predators of conservation concern. Rooting activity may trigger effects on ground-dwelling rodents at the population level.
Mori, E., Ferretti, F., Lagrotteria, A., La Greca, L., Solano, E., Fattorini, N. (2020). Impact of wild boar rooting on small forest-dwelling rodents. ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 35(4), 675-681 [10.1111/1440-1703.12113].
Impact of wild boar rooting on small forest-dwelling rodents
Mori E.
;Ferretti F.;Fattorini N.
2020-01-01
Abstract
Assessing impacts of wild boar on ecosystems is a research priority worldwide, with applied implications for environmental management. We evaluated whether rooting intensity by wild boar affected a rodent community in Central Italy. Rooting intensity was measured within trap transects and all around them, following standard procedures. We live-trapped rodents in coppiced forests with a gradient of rooting intensity (including a fenced, boar-proof, area) and evaluated relationships between abundance and rooting for two arboreal and five ground-dwelling species. Among those, the most abundant ones were the bank vole Myodes glareolus and the yellow-necked wood mouse Apodemus flavicollis. Rooting within and outside transects correlated to each other, as well as with the local passage rate of the wild boar, assessed through camera-trapping. We found a negative relationship between rooting intensity and abundance of bank voles, that is, the main food resources of some predators of conservation concern. Rooting activity may trigger effects on ground-dwelling rodents at the population level.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11365/1123855